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1.
J Ind Microbiol Biotechnol ; 28(1): 42-7, 2002 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11938470

ABSTRACT

Solar salterns can be modeled as giant outdoor chemostats, much like a series of dams on a slow-moving river. Microorganisms and their products play an essential, but sometimes uncharacterized, role in salt production in these ponds, from seawater salinity up through NaCl saturation. They may physically affect the evaporation process and their by-products may chemically modify or bind with dissolved ions. Many solar salt facilities engage microbiologists to establish monitoring programs for analyses of nutrients, standing crop and associated biological variables in the ponds. Other solar salt companies engage microbiologists only when there are "crises" in the ponds that interfere with salt production.


Subject(s)
Drug Contamination , Industrial Microbiology/methods , Mining/methods , Sodium Chloride/isolation & purification , Carbon/metabolism , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Oxygen/metabolism , Polysaccharides/analysis , Seawater/chemistry , Viscosity
2.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 48(2): 352-60, 1984 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16346609

ABSTRACT

Eighteen strains of extremely halophilic bacteria and three strains of moderately halophilic bacteria were isolated from four different solar salt environments. Growth tests on carbohydrates, low-molecular-weight carboxylic acids, and complex medium demonstrated that the moderate halophiles and strains of the extreme halophiles Haloarcula and Halococcus grew on most of the substrates tested. Among the Halobacterium isolates were several metabolic groups: strains that grew on a broad range of substrates and strains that were essentially confined to either amino acid (peptone) or carbohydrate oxidation. One strain (WS-4) only grew well on pyruvate and acetate. Most strains of extreme halophiles grew by anaerobic fermentation and possibly by nitrate reduction. Tests of growth potential in natural saltern brines demonstrated that none of the halobacteria grew well in brines which harbor the densest populations of these bacteria in solar salterns. All grew best in brines which were unsaturated with NaCl. The high concentrations of Na and Mg found in saltern crystallizer brines limited bacterial growth, but the concentrations of K found in these brines had little effect. MgSO(4) was relatively more inhibitory to the extreme halophiles than was MgCl(2), but the reverse was true for the moderate halophiles.

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